
Contents
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The Short Title Catalogue's record of censorship The Short Title Catalogue's record of censorship
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Clarifying some misunderstandings Clarifying some misunderstandings
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Censorship: the historical and textual evidence Censorship: the historical and textual evidence
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The 1577 edition The 1577 edition
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The 1587 Chronicles The 1587 Chronicles
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The dangerous enterprise The dangerous enterprise
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3 Censorship
Get accessCyndia Susan Clegg is a Distinguished Professor of English at Pepperdine University. She specializes in early modern print culture and English Renaissance literature. Her publications include: The Peaceable and Prosperous Regiment of Blessed Queene Elisabeth: A Facsimile from Holinshed's Chronicles (2005), Press Censorship in Elizabethan England (1997), Press Censorship in Jacobean England (2002), Press Censorship in Caroline England (2008), and numerous articles and book chapters.
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Published:28 January 2013
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Abstract
This chapter discusses the censorship of the 1577 and 1587 editions of Holinshed's Chronicles – a common condition for historical writing in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The circumstances surrounding the censorship for both editions of the book, along with textual evidence, offer distinctive insights into both Elizabethan political culture and printing house practices. The censorship and reformation of both editions reflects apprehension about material that might be construed as slanderous or denigrating to the reputations of important men of the Church and the State. With the 1587 edition, censorship and revision reflect the State's fear that published accounts might either jeopardize English diplomacy (both in Scotland and the Low Countries) or support international Catholic objections to the English legal system. That the political materials which were reviewed and reformed appeared only in the continuation histories suggests that their authors must not have felt constrained by either the censorship of the 1577 Chronicles or a conviction that theirs was a dangerous venture.
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